A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source

Clock signals are a necessity in most digital electronic systems to synchronise various parts of the integrated circuit. As a time reference, the clock signal’s frequency should be accurate and constant. Temperature invariance and power consumption are two key specifications for an on-chip oscillato...

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Main Author: Tan, Wei Lin
Other Authors: Siek Liter
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/71670
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-716702023-07-07T16:57:32Z A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source Tan, Wei Lin Siek Liter School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering DSO National Laboratories DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering Clock signals are a necessity in most digital electronic systems to synchronise various parts of the integrated circuit. As a time reference, the clock signal’s frequency should be accurate and constant. Temperature invariance and power consumption are two key specifications for an on-chip oscillator. Using 65nm CMOS process, this paper proposes a low-power on-chip temperature-invariant clock of 0.24% frequency variation across -40°C to 125°C about 1 MHz, consuming 367uW at 3.3V supply voltage. Across three process corners, its largest frequency variance is 0.46% and its maximum power consumption is 471uW. The circuit is also supply-independent and resistor process-independent. The proposed design uses switched capacitors to track the output frequency of the oscillator. When the loop is in equilibrium, current through the switched capacitor will be equal to the reference current and the frequency of the oscillator reaches steady state. By designing the reference current to be constant with temperature, the oscillation frequency can be made less sensitive to temperature changes. If the frequency drifts, current through the switched capacitor changes, resulting in a net current flowing in or out of the integrator, whose output voltage controls the frequency of the oscillator. Through the negative feedback loop, the oscillator will be adjusted back to its equilibrium frequency. Bachelor of Engineering 2017-05-18T07:32:51Z 2017-05-18T07:32:51Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/71670 en Nanyang Technological University 81 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Tan, Wei Lin
A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
description Clock signals are a necessity in most digital electronic systems to synchronise various parts of the integrated circuit. As a time reference, the clock signal’s frequency should be accurate and constant. Temperature invariance and power consumption are two key specifications for an on-chip oscillator. Using 65nm CMOS process, this paper proposes a low-power on-chip temperature-invariant clock of 0.24% frequency variation across -40°C to 125°C about 1 MHz, consuming 367uW at 3.3V supply voltage. Across three process corners, its largest frequency variance is 0.46% and its maximum power consumption is 471uW. The circuit is also supply-independent and resistor process-independent. The proposed design uses switched capacitors to track the output frequency of the oscillator. When the loop is in equilibrium, current through the switched capacitor will be equal to the reference current and the frequency of the oscillator reaches steady state. By designing the reference current to be constant with temperature, the oscillation frequency can be made less sensitive to temperature changes. If the frequency drifts, current through the switched capacitor changes, resulting in a net current flowing in or out of the integrator, whose output voltage controls the frequency of the oscillator. Through the negative feedback loop, the oscillator will be adjusted back to its equilibrium frequency.
author2 Siek Liter
author_facet Siek Liter
Tan, Wei Lin
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Wei Lin
author_sort Tan, Wei Lin
title A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
title_short A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
title_full A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
title_fullStr A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
title_full_unstemmed A low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
title_sort low power, temperature-invariant frequency source
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/71670
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